Republic of Texas, 1900-09
Introduction
In the first decade of the twentieth century, Texans shared the optimism and confidence that permeated the Progressive Era. Its agricultural economy was suspicious of business but stood on the verge of an oil boom that would make Texas an international symbol of corporate power. During these years the country pursued political reform in campaigns for woman suffrage and the regulation of corporations.
There were 3,896,542 Texans recorded in the 1910 census. It was also still essentially rural. Two-thirds of the populace lived in the country, and fewer than one of five Texans resided in towns of more than 10,000. Agriculture dominated the economy. More than 800,000 men were farmers; the number of women and children who helped them is unknown. Products of farms and ranches totaled more than five times the output of Texas factories.
These years were prosperous for cotton farmers, with prices well above the disastrous lows of the 1890s. But farmers still complained of low profits, inequities in the marketing process, and difficulty in securing needed credit through the banking system. Equally serious was the problem of farm tenancy. Landless farmers lacking capital rented their labor and gave the owner one-fourth or one-third of the cotton crop. Sharecroppers were the most impoverished of the 200,000 tenants in Texas, but poverty was widespread in the farm areas.
The principal businesses were lumber, oil, and railroads. Increasing consolidation among lumber firms gave them dominant power over their workers, and labor relations were often embittered. The oil industry had only begun to establish itself. Discovery of the Spindletop oilfield near Beaumont in January 1901 marked the opening of the prosperous phase of the business in Texas.
Railroads were the other major industrial force in Texas. The Railroad Commission, established in the 1890s, closely regulated the seventy-one companies that used the 11,000 miles of track in 1904. Freight rates had dramatically declined and the rail companies found it difficult to issue new securities under Texas laws. Expansion of mileage slowed accordingly. A growing interest in good highways also signaled an emerging rival for the rail lines. There were 3,591 miles of paved roads in 1910, and highway proponents accelerated their campaign.
While Texas retained its predominantly agricultural character throughout the period, urbanization also commenced an inexorable process of growth. There were 132 "cities" in Texas in 1910, but only San Antonio, Dallas, Houston, and Fort Worth numbered more than 50,000 inhabitants. Austin, El Paso, Galveston, and Waco had between 25,000 and 50,000 residents. More than ninety of the so-called urban areas had fewer than 5,000 people within their city limits.
White Texans gave little thought to the situation of the black and Hispanic minorities in the years before 1920. Segregation kept the 690,000 blacks from offering any challenge to the existing order of white supremacy. The black population comprised nearly 18 percent of all Texans by 1910 and was sprinkled throughout the eastern third of the state. Blacks were a majority in no more than ten counties.
The Mexican population, numbering about 250,000, did not confront the highly visible repression that blacks endured, but their lot in the border counties of South Texas was one of poverty and political subordination. The economic position of most Mexican Americans was desperate; some earned only fifty cents a day in 1901. To most white residents, the Mexican-American community remained an unknown and despised entity.
In many ways the years after 1900 left Texas relatively unchanged. The state was still rural, agricultural, segregated, and poor. Industrialization, the rapid growth of cities, and the great wealth that became legend were years away. Nonetheless the Progressive Era in Texas had initiated trends that would lead to the emergence of the modern state.
I. Geography
- a. Area
- • Total Area: 268,581 mi2/696,241 km2
• Land: 261,866 mi2/678,835 km2
• Water: 6715 mi2/17,406 km2
b. Country Comparison to the World: 40
c. Land Boundaries
- • Total: 2845 mi/4552 km
• Countries: United States, Mexico
d. Coastline: 367 mi/591 km
e. Climate: The size of Texas and location at the intersection of multiple climate zones gives it highly variable weather.
f. Terrain: Gulf Coastal Plains, Interior Lowlands, Great Plains, and Basin and Range Province.
g. Resources:
- • Mineral: coal, lignite, oil, natural gas
• Metal: iron, mercury, silver
• Natural: timber
h. Natural Hazards: thunderstorms, tornados, and hurricanes
II. People and Society
- a. Ethnic Groups: White Texans; Free Blacks, and Mexicans
b. Language: English
c. Population: 3,048,710 (1900)
III. Government
- a. Type: Federal Republic
b. Capitol: Austin
c. Administrative Divisions: 244 counties
IV. Economy
- a. Budget (1900-1909 average)
- • Revenues: $21,958,454 TXD
• Expenditures: $18,445,101 TXD
b. Agriculture:
- • Crops: cotton, cotton seed, corn, oats, wheat
• Livestock: beef cows, milk cows, horses, mules, sheep
c. Manufacturing: mills, lumber, meat packing, railroad shops, oil refining
d. Industries: timber, meat packing, oil, iron
e. Exports: cotton, wheat, lumber
f. Imports: iron, manufactured goods
V. Transportation
- a. Roads: 3591 mi/5745 km
b. Railways: 9702 mi/15,613 km
c. Waterways: 5 navigable rivers (Sabine, Trinity, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande)
d. Ports: Galveston, Sabine Pass, Port Arthur, Beaumont, Houston
VI. Military and Security
- a. Military Branches:
- • Regular: Army (5600 personnel), Navy and Marines (2700 personnel)
• Militia (30,487 available for service)
b. Military Service Age and Obligation: voluntary militia enrollment for males between the ages of 18 and 45
c. Military Expenditures: $5,496,224 TXD (average 1900-09); 29% of Budget Expenditures